English's New Consonant
5 hours ago
- #Linguistics
- #English Language
- #Phonetics
- The article discusses the emergence of a new consonant sound in English, /ʒ/ (as in 'pleasure'), arguing it may be the newest addition to the language's phonemes.
- It explores the complex definition of what constitutes a 'sound of a language,' distinguishing between phonemes (key building blocks like /t/ and /m/) and allophones (context-dependent variants like [ʔ] for /t/).
- The /ʒ/ sound developed from historical sequences like [zj] in words such as 'measure' and 'visual,' and from loanwords, primarily from French, gaining phonemic status over time as it helps distinguish words (e.g., 'measure' vs. 'mesher').
- Despite being a phoneme, /ʒ/ retains a marginal status due to limited use in word-initial positions (e.g., 'genre') and variations in pronunciation (e.g., 'garage'), often perceived as foreign or exotic.
- The sound fills a historical gap in English's consonant system as the voiced counterpart to /ʃ/ ('sh'), with its adoption reflecting linguistic evolution and the fluid boundaries between languages.